In the Lovecraft tale, a gruesome discovery made during a scientific expedition to the South Pole in the 1930s hints at the true origin of mankind having come from elder gods from another planet. Bad things happen when those life forms are awakened.

So that may not be a big surprise to you. No, the big surprise is the project’s producer: James Cameron.

Regrettably, my estimation of del Torro just went down a fair amount by having his work associated with Cameron in any way.

http://thenicsperiment.blogspot.com/ Nicholas

Weird. At the Mountains of Madness seems perfect for Del Toro, but Cameron producing? He always seems to have an angle. What is it this time? As innocuous as the original story is, I can’t help but look at the subliminal links to the Cameron produced documentary “The Lost Tomb of Jesus”, and could easily see him subversively working “the true origin of mankind” thing as if it is entirely plausible.

But I’m just happy we’ll have him back on the big screen doing fantasy/horror again. Loved “Pan’s Labyrinth” and “Hellboy 2.” I have a hunch the studio-driven “Hobbit” would have restrained him too much. Del Toro’s a filmmaker who needs to be let loose and I’m curious to see how that jives with Cameron’s perfectionism.

Ryan

well…….I didn’t see that one comin’

but I’m cool with it.

Gaith

Sounds as though Big Jim is becoming thoroughly alarmed at the post-production abuse of poorly upconverting 3D movies, and is producing this to help GDT and co. get theirs right.